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Big bottoms can save you from diabetes
Reported January 04, 2009
Here’s some good news for women who find it
hard to squeeze into their skinny jeans, courtesy their big bottoms: a
generously proportioned derriere could be good for health, say scientists.
Accord to research, the fat in buttocks and
hips may protect against type 2 diabetes.
Scientists at Harvard Medical School in America reckon that the type of fat
that accumulates around the hips and bottom may offer some protection
against developing the condition.
Fat found commonly around the lower areas, known as subcutaneous fat, or fat
that collects under the skin, helps to improve the sensitivity of the
hormone insulin. Insulin is responsible for regulating blood sugar and
therefore a big bottom might offer some protection against diabetes.
The boffins said that fat which collects around the stomach can raise a
person’s risk of diabetes and heart disease . But, people with pear-shaped
bodies, with fat deposits in the buttocks and hips, are less prone to these
disorders.
Lead researcher Dr Ronald Kahn said that the
research on mice had shown that not all fat was bad and could help to
prevent the onset of Type 2 diabetes.
The team is trying to find the substances produced in subcutaneous fat that
provide the benefit because they could lead to the development of drugs,
reports the Daily Express.
The study is published in the journal Cell Metabolism.
Dr Iain Frame, director of research at health charity Diabetes UK, said: “It
has long been known that the distribution of fat may be a determining factor
in increasing risk to developing Type 2 diabetes. The paper describes the
manipulation of fat cells in mice. Therefore it would be misleading, or even
wrong, at this stage to link the results of this work to whether or not a
person is at more or less risk of developing Type 2 diabetes because of the
size of their buttocks.
“It would certainly take away from our key message based on hard scientific
evidence rather than the extrapolation of preliminary findings from
experiments in mice, that maintaining a healthy weight through a balanced
diet
low in fat, salt and sugar and with plenty of fruit and vegetables is by far
the best way for most people in Britain to reduce the risk of developing
Type 2 diabetes.”
Source : journal Cell Metabolism |